I am a Tombstone Tourist: someone who loves to wander cemeteries. I find it akin to visiting a museum: an opportunity to enjoy rarely seen sculpture, intricate carvings, and amazing architecture, all in a tranquil outdoor setting. This blog is about cemetery culture, art, history, issues of death, and genealogy - subjects of current relevance. I usually find something that intrigues me and makes me want to dig deeper. Care to join me? Read on...

Friday, May 10, 2013

How Do We Dispose of Murderers Remains

The
news, this week, seemed to be about the controversy of what to do with the body
of Boston Marathon bomber, Tamerlan Tsarnaev.

Robert Healy

On
Monday authorities in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where Tsarnaev spent his teen years while in the U.S., issued a statement that the city did not want him to be
buried there.

A statement issued by Cambridge City Manager Robert Healy read, "I have determined that it is not in the interest
of 'peace within the city' to execute a cemetery deed for a plot within the
Cambridge Cemetery for the body of Tamerlan Tsarnaev."

Shroud

His
widow, Katherine Russell Tsarnaev, indicated she wanted her husband’s body
released to his family.Those
family members have claimed it and prepared it for a Muslim interment but cannot find a cemetery that will accept it for burial.

Protesters in Cambridge

Protesters
and picketers marched in Cambridge and Boston, opposing any plans to bury the
marathon bomber in their communities.In fact, the entire state of Massachusetts made it clear they do not
want the body buried there.

Governor Patrick

Russian Consulate

Governor
Deval Patrick declined to intervene.The State Department also refused to get involved and recommended that
the Russian Consulate take the lead. But Russian officials did not
respond, and now cemeteries across the U.S. are also refusing the burial.

Officials
are now facing the question of what to do when no one wants the body?

Private Funeral

But
why is there this problem about disposing of the remains of a terrorists/murderer?We, as a country, have buried many
killers, murderers, presidential assassins, and yes,“domestic terrorists” throughout our history.

According
to crime officials, the family of murderers and assassins want to keep the
funeral arrangements private, fearing media attention, public protests, and
defacing of the grave.

Last
December Adam Lanza opened fire at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown,
Connecticut, killing 20 first-graders and six employees. Lanza committed
suicide when police arrived on the scene.

His
father claimed the body and ‘private arrangements’ were held.In other words, the family did not want
it known if the killer was buried or cremated, nor the location of a possible
interment. The funeral home that handled the body requested to remain
anonymous.

Alfred P. Murrah Building

On
April 19, 1995, Timothy McVeigh detonated a truck bomb in front of the Alfred
P. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City killing 168 people and injuring
over 800. McVeigh became the first to be called an American terrorist.

Terre Haute Correctional Facility

McVeigh, a veteran, was executed in 2001 at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana.
Thanks to legislation introduced by Senator Arlen Specter and signed by
President Bill Clinton, any veteran convicted of capital crimes cannot be
buried in any military cemetery.

McVeigh's Attorney

McVeigh was therefore cremated by a Terre Haute funeral home, and the ashes given to his attorney who scattered them at an undisclosed location.

On
April 20, 1999 two high school seniors, Dylan Klebold and Eric Harris, went on a
shooting spree at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colorado.Within twenty minutes, the pair had
killed 12 students and one teacher.Another two-dozen students were wounded.Klebold and Harris committed suicide.

Cremation

The
bodies were returned to their families.Klebold’s family had him cremated – fearing that burying him in a public
cemetery would lead to desecration to his grave.Harris’s family will not say if or where he was buried.

Columbia Correctional Institution

In
1994, mass murderer Jeffrey Dahmer was beaten to death by another inmate, while
serving a life sentence at the Columbia
Correctional Institution in Portage, Wisconsin, for murdering 16 men and boys.

Dahmer's Parents

Dahmer’s
divorced parents decided to have him cremated and then divided the ashes
between them. It is unknown if either parent buried them.

Stateville Correctional Center

Inside Stateville

In
1991, mass murderer Richard Speck died of a heart attack while incarcerated at
the Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois.Speck murdered eight student nurses in
Chicago in 1966.

After
his death, no one claimed his body fearing reprisal and desecration of the
grave.Speck was cremated and the
ashes scattered in a location only known to the Will County Corner and three
others who witnessed it.

Map Where Bodies Found

Ted
Bundy murdered an unknown number of women and girls during the 1970’s.He confessed to more than 30 killings
in seven states.

Cascade Mountains

Bundy
was executed in 1989.His body was
taken to a funeral home in Gainesville, Florida where it was cremated.Bundy had requested his ashes be
scattered over the Cascade Mountains in Washington State – the same location as
where at least four of his victims had been found.Reports indicate that his ashes were scattered at an
undisclosed location in accordance with his will.

In
1963, Lee Harvey Oswald was arrested for assassinating President John F.
Kennedy.Two days later, Oswald
was gunned down at a Dallas Police Station.

Rose Hill Memorial Cemetery

He
was buried at Rose Hill Memorial Cemetery in Fort Worth, Texas.

The
body was exhumed in 1981 to verify that it was Oswald and then reinterred shortly afterwards.

Hitler's Bunker

Adolf
Hitler, the Nazi dictator responsible for the Holocaust and millions of deaths
during World War II, committed suicide on April 30, 1945 when Soviet forces
were closing in on him.

Berlin to Magdeburg

SMERSH

According
to Hitler’s instructions, his body was doused in fuel and set on fire outside
his bunker.Two days later, the
Soviet’s recovered what was left of the body. They then buried and exhumed it
several times, as a way to take it with them as they made their way from Berlin
to Magdeburg. The remains were finally buried in a courtyard at the SMERSH
counter-intelligence facility in Magdeburg in 1946.

Biederitz River

But in 1970, the KGB exhumed the remains and had them cremated and pulverized
before throwing them into the Biederitz River. (Another report says the ashes were flushed into the city
sewage system.)

John
Wilkes Booth, the assassin of President Abraham Lincoln, also had a hard time
staying buried.Booth was buried
in a storage room at the Old Penitentiary in Washington, D.C. after he was killed by Union soldiers.

Booth Family Marker

But
two years later the body was moved to a warehouse at the Washington
Arsenal.In 1869, the remains were finally
released to his family who buried him in the family plot at Green Mount
Cemetery in Baltimore.

Pick Up of Body

Tsarnaev’s
body was finally claimed by his family in the U.S.and released to a local funeral home
earlier this week. But so far, no cemetery in the country has agreed to allow
the burial. If a location is not found soon, we may need to act as Tsarnaev’s
home country would.

According
to Russian law, terrorists killed by government forces should be buried in an
undisclosed location and forgotten.Not even the
family is notified where the grave is.

~
Joy

05/10/13 3 P.M. Update:The body of Tsarnaev has been buried in a Muslim cemetery in Caroline County, Virginia. Officials have released a statement indicating that the county was not consulted before the burial and did not provide permission. However, it is not standard practice for a county, or town, to be consulted before a burial.

About Me

I
love wine and will take any chance to sip, savor and share it! Hence, Joy’s JOY
of Wine http://joysjoyofwine.blogspot.com,
a weekly blog about all things wine. I've been in the industry for 15
years as a winery owner, marketing director, speaker, writer, wine judge, and
100% vino girl!

I'm
also a professional freelance magazine and book writer uncorking articles about
wine, food, history, travel, cemetery history and culture. My interest in
cemetery culture led to another great, or maybe I should say
"grave" gig, my weekly blog: A Grave Interest http://agraveinterest.blogspot.com where I get to travel around the country and speak about cemetery topics for genealogy, history and
education conferences.

I suppose you could say that wine is my
passion, and cemeteries are my diversion ... into another world.

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